Remember the Liberty!
Most Americans have never heard of the Israeli,
Ephraim ÒEppieÓ Evron. A half century ago, in May of 1967, he
was deputy chief of mission in the Israeli embassy in Washington and in that
ostensible capacity had a meeting with President Lyndon Johnson in the Oval
Office on May 26. From all
indications, as we learn from Phillip Nelson in Remember the Liberty!: Almost Sunk by
Treason on the High Seas, Evron was likely the real power in
the embassy as the top Mossad official there. An even more interesting thing about Evron was that he was Òone of the main conspiratorsÓ in the
infamous Lavon Affair, a failed plot in 1954 by
Israel to bomb U.S. and British facilities in Egypt and pin it on Arab
extremists. (In 2005 the Israeli government outrageously honored nine of its agents involved
in that episode.) Thanks to
AmericaÕs Israel-first press, the appalling, treacherous
Lavon Affair is no doubt as little known to Americans as is Eppie Evron.
Thirteen days after that meeting, on June 8,
1967, on the fourth day of IsraelÕs highly successful Six-Day War with its Arab
neighbors, after hours of aerial surveillance, Israel would launch a murderous,
multi-staged assault on the American intelligence ship, the USS Liberty. The identity of the ship was as
unmistakable as if it had been the Statue
of Liberty. It was bristling with
antennas, it flew a large American flag, and its name was clearly painted on
its stern. The 4-foot high identification
numbers on either side of the bow were in Latin writing, GTR-5, not in Arabic. The weather
and visibility were perfect.
Beginning shortly after dawn, Òat least twelve,
possibly thirteen Israeli aircraft began surveilling
the Liberty, some of which were only
1,000 feet or less in altitude, apparently to photograph and ÔmapÕ her for
later targeting purposes.Ó The
assault began without warning just before 2:00 p.m. when three curiously
unmarked French-built Mirage fighter jets Òbore down on the ship in a fast
low-level attack that began with rockets targeted at the four gun mounts and
heat-seeking missiles aimed at the communications gear, with their warmed
transmitters.Ó
With the LibertyÕs
ability to defend itself completely neutralized by the knocking out of its four
meager .50-caliber machine guns, slower Super Mystere
fighters replaced the Mirage jets, Òprobably because they could rake the ship
even more effectively.Ó That they did
with cannons, rockets, and napalm, spreading carnage among the defenseless,
stunned crewmen.
The Liberty
carried 294 men. Just over 70% of
them would end up as casualties of the attack, with 34 dead and 174 injured.
Officially, to this day, the episode is written off as just a Òtragic
accident,Ó a simple case of Òmistaken identity.Ó So thoroughgoing has the news
suppression been that four years after the event Lyndon Johnson (more
precisely, his ghost writer, Doris Kearns Goodwin) was able to write in his
memoirs, Vantage Point, that 10 men
had been killed and 100 injured, and no one of note said anything about the
outrageous undercount. ÒWho cares?Ó
our news media said in so many words.
The experience, as it is recounted in the book,
is made all the more poignant by the fact that we get eyewitness accounts from
NelsonÕs co-authors, attack-survivors Ernest A. Gallo, Ronald G. Kukal, and Phillip F. Tourney. The four writers together are almost
uniquely qualified to provide in this 50th anniversary year the
definitive account and analysis of the assault on the Liberty. Nelson, with
his previous two books, LBJ: The Mastermind of the JFK Assassination and LBJ: From Mastermind to
Colossus has
established himself as the most incisive and fearless biographer of the
Òpsychopathic,Ó ultra-Zionist 36th president of the United States.
In that second book, with most of a chapter devoted to the subject, Nelson
gives the sort of attention to the Liberty
attack that is missing from LBJÕs Wikipedia page, but one should not think
that he already knows all he needs to know about the Liberty assault from that account. This latest book is full of important
new revelations.
Gallo was one of the many intelligence officers
on the Liberty, which was under the
control of the National Security Administration, though manned largely by U.S.
Navy sailors. He is the author of
the 2013 book, Liberty Injustices: A SurvivorÕs Account of American Bigotry and is
the current president of the USS Liberty Veterans
Association. Kukal was the
petty officer in charge of body recovery and identification on the
Liberty. No one is more intimately
familiar with the pain and suffering caused by the attack. Tourney, a three-time president of the
USS Liberty Veterans Association, was a Navy enlisted man assigned to damage
control (fireman) on the day of the attack. He is the author of What I Saw That Day: IsraelÕs June 8th, 1967 Holocaust
of US Servicemen aboard the USS Liberty and its Aftermath and is the host of the
Saturday call-in show Your Voice Counts on the Republic Broadcasting
Network.
Frustrated Madman President
No one reading Remember the Liberty can reach any other conclusion than that, as
with the Lavon Affair, this was another failed false flag attack, and that it
was virtually a miracle that it failed.
After the shipÕs defenses and communications had been blown away,
gunboats fired four torpedoes that missed.
The fifth torpedo struck the Liberty,
but it did not penetrate into the bowels of the ship, having squarely hit one
of the structural I-beams. Even so,
it opened a large hole in the side of the ship. Had the torpedo struck a couple of
inches to the left or the right, though, it would have caused the shipÕs
boilers to explode as the cold sea water rushed in and the ship would have
fractured and sunk within minutes.
That was the clear intent of the attackers.
As Nelson has pieced together the evidence, the
assault on the Liberty was as
carefully planned over a long period of time as was the Six-Day War
itself. The 294 men on board were
meant to be the sacrificial lambs for the audacious, grandiose scheme that was
to draw in the United States with both feet—likely even with the use of
nuclear weapons—against the Egyptians, who had been virtually pushed into
the orbit of the Soviet Union by AmericaÕs strongly pro-Israel policy under
Johnson. Two A-4 bomber aircraft
launched from the USS America
aircraft carrier at the same time that fighter jets took off from the carrier
to come to the aid of the Liberty
were, according to one of the pilots, carrying nuclear weapons targeted for
Cairo. Those fighter jets, had they
not have been recalled by Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara himself, would
have arrived in time to prevent the worst of the attack, the torpedo attack
that killed 26 men in the communications room. For their part, the bombers did not
return until four or five days later.
As the pilot explained, the nuclear bombs made the planes Òtoo heavy and
dangerous to land back on the aircraft carrier,Ó and they had to be diverted to
a land-based airstrip.
In California, at Beale Air Force Base north of
Sacramento, B-52 bombers along with KC-135 midair refueling tankers were
scrambled between 2:00 and 4:00 a.m., which would have been at least an hour
before the attack actually took place.
Presidential adviser and future defense secretary Clark Clifford wrote
in his memoirs that he was awakened at home at 6 a.m. that same morning, June
8, for an emergency meeting at the White House. That was two hours before the ÒsurpriseÓ
Israeli attack began.
At the center of the scheme was President
Johnson. As an American politician
not from the state of New York, Johnson had long since shown himself to be
ahead of his time in his total commitment to the state of Israel, his Òpassionate attachment,Ó if you will. To illustrate his point, Nelson reminds
us of the letter that Johnson, as Senate majority leader, wrote to President
Dwight EisenhowerÕs secretary of state, John Foster Dulles in February of 1957
in opposition to UN sanctions on Israel for its role in the Suez Crisis and
then leaked to The New York Times. Eisenhower and his administration
supported the sanctions and he was furious with Johnson for undercutting
official U.S. government policy. In
response to JohnsonÕs affront, Eisenhower went on radio and television with
this message, not mentioning Johnson by name: ÒAmerica has either one voice or
none, and that voice is the voice of the President—whether everybody
agrees with him or not.Ó He further stated that the U.N. had Òno choice but to
exert pressure upon Israel.Ó
As president, Johnson didnÕt just reverse John
KennedyÕs policy on Vietnam, dramatically escalating American involvement in
the war as opposed to KennedyÕs directive to begin bringing our troops home,
but he gave the green light to IsraelÕs nuclear program, which Kennedy had
strongly opposed, setting the country off on the extremely pro-Israel course
that it has followed ever since.
That this was done in spite of the vicious, unprovoked assault on 294
Americans serving their country is evidence, almost in itself, that something
is seriously amiss here.
AmericaÕs military assistance to Israel also took a big jump up during
JohnsonÕs administration. In
NelsonÕs words:
Unfortunately, the cost to the United States
was very high, especially in terms of the intangible loss of valued integrity,
respect and honor to its friends and allies. Even to Israel itself, which
Undersecretary of State George Ball concluded, poignantly, resulted in the
Israelis coming to believe that, if they could get by with an attack of this
enormity, then they could Òget by with almost anything.Ó It may explain why
Israel gets the most foreign aid dispensed by the U.S., but still wants
more. Their 2016 request is up to
$5 billion per year from $3 billion in recent years.
As Nelson tells it though, as things have
turned out they are not nearly as bad as they might have been had the plot to sink the Liberty
succeeded. By NelsonÕs thesis, Johnson saw our big plunge into the Middle
East on the successful side of beleaguered little Israel as a dramatic way to
reverse the course of his own political fortunes, always foremost in his
consideration. Jewish Americans,
who tend to be heavily liberal in their orientation, were in the forefront of
the opposition to his Vietnam policy.
Here was his chance for him to be their hero and to thereby cement his
chance for re-election in 1968.
What the grand gesture on behalf of Israel needed was what something
that the Project for a New American Century has since given a rather bad name,
a Òcatalyzing event.Ó That event was to have
been the sinking of the Liberty by
the Soviet-allied Egyptians, we were to be told, with
the loss of all of its crew. A more
dastardly plot is hard to imagine, but no other explanation for what is known
to have transpired makes nearly as much sense.
ÒI want that Goddamn ship going to the
bottom. No help. Recall the wings.Ó That is the precise order that Johnson
gave Rear Admiral Lawrence Geis, the commander of the
battle group of which the America was
a part, the second time American
planes were recalled, this time after the torpedo had struck. Geis gave that
information years later to Lieutenant Commander David Lewis, who had been the
head of the NSA group on the
Liberty. Geis
had asked Lewis to keep it secret until after he was dead, which Lewis did.
Johnson apparently thought Secretary of Defense
Robert McNamara had not been forceful enough when he recalled the planes from
their first attempt at a rescue effort. McNamaraÕs words to Geis had been, ÒPresident Johnson is not going to go to war
or embarrass an American ally over a few sailors.Ó This information comes from
Chief Petty Officer J.Q. ÒTonyÓ Hart, who worked in a U.S. Navy relay station
in Morocco processing communications between Washington and the 6th
Fleet. Probably the most revealing
thing about this conversation is that at that early stage of the attack neither
Geis nor even the men on the Liberty knew that the attackers were actually our Israeli Òally.Ó Geis learned the identity of the attackers from his
superiors, not from the ones who were crying for help.
The Foiled Plot
The scheme to sink the Liberty was thwarted not just by the fortunate trajectory of that
one torpedo that struck the ship.
The heroic efforts of Captain William McGonagle
and his crew must also be credited, but, before that, what the 23 year-old
seaman Terry Halbardier did saved the day for the 260
men who survived, and probably saved the day for a lot more of us. One can read a very moving and
informative tribute to Halbardier by former CIA
analyst Ray McGovern at Consortiumnews.com., who also wrote the foreword
to Remember the Liberty!
As noted, the attacking airplanes had
specifically targeted the shipÕs communications. Within ten minutes of the initial
onslaught Halbardier risked his life to go out amid
the strafing to string a new cable from the one undamaged antenna to the one
functioning transmitter, which was only functioning because it happened to have
been shut down when the heat-seeking missiles came in. They sent a cry for help that somehow
got through the intense radio jamming efforts of the Israelis (which were
tellingly aimed at American radio frequencies). It was because of this fact that Johnson
and McNamara were forced into their extraordinarily incriminating scurry-around
mode in which they had to justify orders to American military officers not to
go to the aid of fellow servicemen under attack. That action might well represent the
lowest point in the history of the American presidency (although one can think
of a number that rival it).
The authors are not sure as to what caused the
Israelis to scuttle the fourth, coup de
grace, stage of the attack.
Helicopters with armed commandos hovered for a while over the blasted
ship with its gaping hole in the side.
The plan, apparently, was for the commandos to rappel down onto the deck
and kill all the survivors before finally sinking the ship. But not only did the Israelis know that
the cry for help had gone out and might, in spite of the plan in which the
American president was known to be complicit, result in rescuers arriving at
any minute from one of their warships, but also a Russian destroyer had come
into view.
From ÒCatalyzing EventÓ to Cover-up
When the Liberty
failed to sink, LBJ and our ruling criminal elite were forced into full
cover-up mode, and that is where we have remained now for exactly half a
century. ÒRush up and hush upÓ is
how we might sum up the farce of an ÒinvestigationÓ and the general aftermath
of the attack. Given the assignment
of overseeing the under-rug-sweeping, the Court of Inquiry, was the Commander
in Chief, U.S. Naval Forces Europe, John McCain, Jr., the father of Senator and
former Republican presidential nominee, John McCain III. How McCain performed his duties is well
summed up by this information from Gallo in the book:
We later learned the testimonies of the wounded
on the USS America and USS Little Rock (a cruiser and Sixth Fleet
Flag Ship) were considered important by the court but were over-ruled by
Admiral McCain in London. They also
wanted to interview Israelis, however McCain insisted the court conclude as
soon as possible. Members of the
crew who gave critical testimony obtained a copy of this report and they
indicated that their testimony was left out if it indicated Israeli brutality.
A proper inquiry into the incident, according
to the Navy Judge Advocate General Captain Ward Boston, Jr., who was chief
assistant to the president of the Court, Rear Admiral Isaac Kidd, would have
required at least six months.
Instead, they were given a week.
So much for the Òrush upÓ
part. The Òhush upÓ comes from the words of
Admiral Kidd, addressing the men on the crippled ship, as recalled by
Tourney. The quote heads up Chapter
4:
Ok fellas, now IÕm an admiral again and I want
each and every one of you to understand something. WeÕre talking about National Security
here, not your personal feelings, not what you did or did not doÉ I could
really give a shit about any of that.
You listen to me once, because this is the only
time youÕre ever going to hear it.
You are NEVER to repeat what you just told me to ANYONE—not your
mother, your father, your wife—ANYONE! Including your shipmates. You are not to discuss this with anyone,
especially—ESPECIALLY—not with the MEDIA, or you will end up in
PRISON, or WORSE!
The general hush-up was successful for quite a
long time. The silence was broken
with a bang, though, in 1979 when survivor James M. Ennes
Jr. came out with his book Assault on the Liberty; The True Story of the Israeli Attack on an
American Intelligence Ship.
Since that time there has been no good excuse for anybody really
interested in the truth to believe the official Òtragic accidentÓ story.
That did not stop former U.S. Navy aviator and
retired bankruptcy court judge A. Jay Cristol from publishing The USS Liberty Incident: The 1967 Israeli Attack on the U.S Navy Spy
Ship, which
purported to give the last word on the matter, that is, the same as the official
first word, Òtragic accident.Ó Thirteen investigations, said Cristol among a lot of other things, had all come to that
same conclusion. As Terence
OÕKeefe pointed out in his December 2003 article in the Washington Report on Middle Eastern Affairs, actually that hasty
first inquiry remains to this day the only thing that has been done that even
purports to be an investigation, and hereÕs what he says about that:
The U.S.
Navy Court of Inquiry: The senior legal adviser to the Court of Inquiry
reflected that, in his entire career, he has never seen court of inquiry
appointing letters with such limited authority, or an investigation made in
such haste. The courtÕs hearings began before the Liberty even arrived in
Malta, and the report was completed just 10 days after the attack. The court
commented on this haste in the official record: ÒThe Court of Inquiry experienced
no unusual difficulties incident to conducting the subject proceedings except
for the necessity of investigating such a major naval disaster of international
significance in an extremely abbreviated time frame.Ó
Due in
part to the required haste and the limitations imposed on the scope of the
courtÕs inquiries (ÒIt was not the responsibility of the court to rule on the
culpability of the attackers, and no evidence was heard from the attacking
nationÓ), the court concluded that Òavailable evidence combines to
indicate...[that the attack was] a case of mistaken identity.Ó
How, one
might ask, could one inquire into all of the circumstances without hearing from
the attacking nation? In fact, the court did neither. According to Captain Ward
Boston, chief legal counsel to the Court of Inquiry, the court found that the
attack was deliberate, but reported falsely that it was not because they were
directed by the president of the United States and the secretary of defense to
report falsely. So the findings are fraudulent. Yet these fraudulent findings
were the basis for several other reports that followed.
Boston, in fact, had been so infuriated by the Cristol book that he came forward with an affidavit stating
that what the Court of Inquiry had done was, in effect, a cover-up. The full affidavit is on pp. 125-128 of Remember the Liberty. On the Internet, one can read it at the
web site of If Americans Knew.
Cristol, of course, has had his
promoters. One very predictable one
is the Jewish-American academic, Daniel Pipes. A response to PipesÕ favorable review of
CristolÕs book on his own web site by David Smyth, which corresponds with what
one will find in Remember the Liberty,
to my mind, speaks very nearly the last word as to the deliberateness of the
attack:
Mr.
Pipes says of the Israeli attack on the USS Liberty: "conspiracy theories
pointing to a purposeful Israeli attack arose quickly and have persisted
through the years." About
twenty years ago I did a story for the Associated Press on the Liberty incident
that was published by the Los Angeles Times and a large number of other US
newspapers. I spoke to the
following officials (their titles correspond to the positions they occupied at
the time of the Liberty incident) and they all told me that the Israeli attack
was deliberate, not an accident:
Secretary of State Dean Rusk
Chief of Naval Operations Admiral Thomas Moorer
CIA Director Richard Helms
NSA Deputy Director Louis Tordella.
I am no authority on conspiracy theories, but there seem to be three
possibilities here. A) Rusk, Moorer, Helms and Tordella were all propagators of a conspiracy theory. B)
They were all dupes of a conspiracy theory. C) There is no valid conspiracy
theory.
I am retired now, but I have always considered it my business to report facts,
not to disentangle conspiracy theories, so I will leave that task to
others. I might add that I gathered
other statements. Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara told me on the phone
that he had "no recollection" of the Liberty Incident. I also talked
on the phone to Admiral Isaac Kidd, who headed the naval court of inquiry into
the Liberty attack. I told him what Rusk and the others had said and asked if he
had any opinion on Israeli culpability. He said, "The giants of that time
can speak out. I know when to keep my mouth shut."
As it turned out, Kidd continued to keep his
mouth shut about the Liberty attack until the end, but his assistant, Captain
Boston, later did his speaking for him.
Where Does Your Allegiance Lie?
Although half a century has now passed, hardly
any event, when looked at in the clear light of day, permits us to come to
grips more completely with the political reality of the United States today than
does the assault on the USS Liberty. We live in an era in which members of
the United States military have never been more venerated. From sports events to airport
encounters, weÕre expected to honor them at every turn. ÒSupport the troopsÓ is seemingly an
admonition that no one can disagree with.
All of the military reverence comes to a
screeching halt, though, when it comes to the surviving crewmen of the USS Liberty. They can only be brushed aside, with
their demands for a true accounting for what was done to them by our great
ÒallyÓ with the connivance of their own leaders. For our politicians to do otherwise and
to get to the bottom of what happened there in the Eastern Mediterranean on
June 8, 1967, would put them on a collision course with the real ruling power
in the country. When it comes down
to the choice of supporting our troops or supporting the ethnic-supremacist
state of Israel, whose fundamental nature was revealed as much by the Liberty attack as it was by the Lavon
Affair, and for whom we regularly pour out our fortune, our credibility, and
our blood, Israel it has to be.
David Martin
June 8, 2017
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